Monday, July 4, 2016

Ziggy Marley Replaced By Foreign Reggae Acts

Published:Friday | June 17, 2016 | 11:44 PMCurtis Campbell
Ziggy Marley
Grammy Award-winning reggae artiste Ziggy Marley has fallen from the No. 1 spot on the Billboard Reggae chart, after spending only two weeks on top with his self-titled album.
Marley's reign on top was terminated by Falling Into Place, released by Rebelution.
Rebelution is a roots-reggae music band formed in Santa Barbara, California, comprising Eric Rachmany, Rory Carey, Wesley Finley, Marley D Williams and Khris Royal.
The prince of reggae, Dennis Brown, had to settle for the No.4 spot this week, with the debut of his tribute album, We Remember Dennis Brown. The album features Chronixx, Raging Fyah, Romain Virgo and Jah Cure, among others.
Alkaline's debut dancehall project, New Level Unlocked, remains the only effort from the genre still in the top 10 and currently sits at No. 7 moving up from No. 9 last week.
Sean Paul is the highest-charting Jamaican artiste this week on the Billboard Hot 100, as his collaboration with foreign artiste Sia, titled Cheap Thrills, climbed to the No. 13 spot. Billboard also noted that the single is this week's biggest gainer in airplay.
Drake's Controlla, which features a Beenie Man sample, now sits at No. 25 on the Hot 100. Interestingly, Vybz Kartel's highly publicised King of The Dancehall album is not on the Billboard chart this week, despite several discussions on social media about the album's supposed success.

Friday, April 4, 2014

Sizzla Kalonji US Visa Revoked, Jamaican Gay Rights Group Celebrate


sizzla
Reggae/dancehall star Sizzla Kalonji was hit with a major setback this week when the United States Embassy revoked his work visa.
The development resulted in a cancellation of his upcoming US Tour.
WATCH: Official Video: Sizzla – Good Love
Jamaican gay rights group Jamaica Association of Gays and Lesbians Abroad (JAGLA) are celebrating the news calling it a victory for gays.
“This is the result of the “Fyah Bun” anti-gay lyrics. If you hate gays so much, why desire to perform in countries that protect the rights of members of the LGBT community? Hypocrisy,” the group wrote on their Facebook page.
“Thanks to members of the LGBT community in the USA who lobbied against Sizzla’s Tour! Big Unnu Self,” the group added.
The promoters of Sizzla’s tour are not giving up on their effort to bring the reggae veteran to the United States.
In a statement sent to Urban Islandz, Stephen Brush of International Artists Agency says the tour is postponed until February.
“It is not a dead issue, but I am no longer comfortable waiting and seeing,” Brush said. “What I would like to do is postpone the tour and look at rebooking it for February and MArch. In the meantime once he does gain entrance into the states, we will fly him over to do a national press release on the tour and explain how all of the promoters on this tour were so supportive and patient with the process.”
The tour was scheduled to run from November 21st through to December 22 with seven shows in Virginia, Washington D.C., New York and Colorado.
Sizzla has not performed in the United States in over 5 years after his visa was revoked in 2008.

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Beenie Man U.S. Work Permit Reinstated


Dancehall star Beenie Man recently got his United States work permit reinstated three years after it was revoked.


Beenie Man along with several other dancehall stars including Mavado, Aidonia, Sizzla, Bounty Killer, among others had their U.S. work visa revoked in 2009 for unknown reasons. However, Beenie Man and Mavado have since had their visas reinstated after some hard work from their legal teams.

Beenie Man acquired a U.S. visiting visa last year, but was unable to perform in that country due to the restrictions. Beenie will headline the upcoming “Groovin In the Park” concert in New York on July 1.
“I am extremely excited to announce that our booking agent here in New York was able to secure a work permit for the Dancehall king, Beenie Man to be a headline performer at this year’s ‘Groovin In the Park’ concert on July 1,” a statement from Beenie Man’s camp reads.

“Music fans in the tri-state area have been waiting for a very long time for the opportunity to see Beenie Man perform live here in the USA again. I am glad we were instrumental in making it happen for the fans. Beenie Man is an extremely talented entertainer and we are happy that he will be again able to showcase his talents on stage in New York,” the statement added.

The good news for Beenie Man comes just weeks after he issued a public apology to the gay community for lyrics in some of his previous songs.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Beenie Man pulled from NZ show

Beenie Man was officially pulled off the line-up for Big Day Out, which will be held in several cities in Australia and New Zealand in January. Beenie Man was billed to perform in Auckland, New Zealand.
Gay activists in New Zealand have been protesting on the Internet, in local newspapers and on air against the performance of Beenie Man in New Zealand due to anti-gay lyrics he had recorded in the past. He was the only reggae/dancehall act billed to perform on the show.
However, the promoter yielded to pressure and decided to remove Beenie Man from the line-up. In a release on the event's website, the promoters said: "Although aware of the controversial nature of Beenie Man and his previous lyrics that have caused offence with the gay and lesbian and wider community, the producers understood that the artiste had renounced these sentiments and no longer expresses those views."
Big Day Out It continued: "Notwithstanding claims of a commitment to the Reggae Compassionate Act, which he signed in 2007 and a promise of adherence to peaceful and humanistic values for the dates here by Beenie Man, the depth of feeling and hurt amongst these groups has convinced us that for us to proceed with his Big Day Out appearances was, and would continue to be, divisive amongst our audience members and would mar the enjoyment of the event for many. For this reason, we have decided not to proceed."
Although there were protests, Beenie Man's brother and manager, Rohan 'Blue' Smith, said the artiste was not officially booked for the show. He said contractual arrangements were still ongoing because they were not comfortable with some aspects of the agreement. He, however, said that if the contractual matters were sorted out, Beenie Man would have been willing to perform.
Repost from: JAMAICA STAR

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Reigns of Power - Transfer Complete

Reggae Music as we have known, loved and embraced it is no more - The almighty forces behind international capital have won out yet again. What pains me most is that the battle was not even lost it was given over as the troops put down their arms silently in the face of what they assumed to be a superior power, without even really trying, really. The few voices of resistance were so small, feeble, and few and far between they may as well have not existed. The question remains though, now that little Reggae has been conquered and the artists voices silenced, what does it really mean to the gay community now? Are they any more empowered by subjugating a group that pretty much admitted it was no match? Tried as I might to reignite the sparks of old that sustained the early battles our forerunners had fought to uphold truth and rights at all costs, the point is now moot, and so I too rest my case.

It takes a nation of millions, they say, and we definitely had that. What we did not manifest was the will to win and moreover not even any real will to fight. Furthermore just like the panthers, the nation, garveyites, and others of the early pioneers of truths and rights, the defeat came from within as divide and conquer proved its efficacy in history yet again also.

The black West Indian gays alligned themselves with the powerful gay agenda and flipped the script on their indigenous culture which, not unlike black culture in America on the whole, frowned, to put it mildly, on what is deemed in the Caribbean, and many other places I might add, as being deviant, homosexuality.

And so they sang. The artists in their defiance of "nastiness" sang the glories of Ital living...but in the end what did it really mean when it seems for the most part they sang in jest in large measure. With few exceptions, many of the most militant artists embraced the very vices they decried in their lyrics. Not that all artists have to be role models, but imagination of artists as practicing what they preached might well have been equally moot.

If you think about the lifestyle choices in general of many artist and hangers on in the genre, one can not actually take them seriously. Just look at their lifestyles. I mean its all rhetoric, the truth and roots, with only rare exceptions. It would take retiring to the hills in a literal sense to transcend the business side of the runnins, which is what rules.

Nevertheless its a done deal in any case, and my words, this blog, the Reggae by the Bay that once offered rich, historical culture to overflowing crowds, its all moot now, the passing of an era. What remains are only the memories. Its clear the downturn started with the crack epidemic in the mid eighties and so the end should not be a surprise since its been a long time coming.

It's official now. Outrage cosigned on the dotted line. The almightly euro/dollar "rises" highest again...

BEENIE MAN, SIZZLA, & CAPLETON STEP UP TO STOP HOMOPHOBIC LYRICS IN REGGAE
Category: News and Politics

Reggae stars Beenie Man, Sizzla, and Capleton have taken the lead in pushing reggae artists to stop releasing anti-gay hate songs.

According to Britain's Pink News, the three reggae stars were the first to sign the Reggae Compassionate Act in a deal that was brokered by reggae promoters and Stop Murder Music activists.

The Act reads, in part, "It must be clear there's no space in the music community for hatred and prejudice, including no place for racism, violence, sexism or homophobia. We do not encourage nor minister to HATE but rather uphold a philosophy of LOVE, RESPECT and UNDERSTANDING towards all human beings as the cornerstone of reggae. We agree to not make statements or perform songs that incite hatred or violence against anyone from any community."

The deal culminates a three-year-long campaign by the Stop Murder Music activists, which resulted from the cancellations of shows and several sponsors pulling their support of reggae acts.

Peter Tatchell, the Stop Murder Music worldwide coordinator, said, "The singers' rejection of homophobia and sexism is an important milestone. We rejoice at their new commitment to music without prejudice. This deal will have a huge, positive impact in Jamaica and the Caribbean. The media coverage will generate public awareness and debate, breaking down ignorance and undermining homophobia."

The campaign against the three reggae stars will be suspended but Tatchell will continue his campaign against the other acts. He said, "The other five murder music artists - Elephant Man, TOK, Bounty Killa, Vybz Kartel and Buju Banton - have not signed the Reggae Compassionate Act."

In the past, Beenie Man has shared his frustration that reggae music was being singled out especially during the second to last season of the Sopranos when a homosexual mobster was killed because of his sexual orientation. The Grammy Award winner said: "They never attack hip-hop. They never attack the comedians. They never attack none of the moviemakers, none of that. Look at the Sopranos right now, you know, so they not coming under no attack for that, you know. That's it."

from Nikki Woods - - CEO of 360° Media and Entertainment Corp.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Buju Breaks Under Pressure?

Buju breaks under pressure?

reposted from Jamaica Observer: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/magazines/Entertainment/html/20091013T230000-0500_161734_OBS_BUJU_BREAKS_UNDER_PRESSURE_.asp

Deejay holds meeting with gays

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Deejay Buju Banton yesterday met with four members of San Francisco's gay community in what is being seen as a move to discuss the continued cancellations of the gigs at various points on his Rasta Got Soul tour of the United States, due to pressure from gay rights groups.

This was reportedly Buju's first meeting ever with gay advocates, to put an end to the controversy that continues to plague him due to his song, Boom Bye Bye, which
he recorded years ago while still a teen.

Back row from left: Buju's PR representative Jonathan Mack, , Bevan Dufty, Andrea Shorter, Eric Mar, Rebecca Rolfe and Tracii McGregor of Gargamel Music. Front row, Michael Petrelis and Buju. (Photo courtesy of Michael Petrelis)

Present at the meeting were gay leaders' supervisor Bevan Dufty, who arranged the meeting, Rebecca Rolfe, executive director of the San Francisco gay community centre, Andrea Shorter of Equality California and advocate Michael Petrelis. Also present was supervisor Eric Mar, a straight leader in the Asian community, Buju, members of his PR team and president of his music company, Gagamel Music, Tracii McGregor.

Advocate Michael Petrelis, who was part of the meeting, was quoted on his blog as saying, "the meeting was very civil and productive, even though at times I had to play the "bad cop" activist, especially when Buju was dominating the discussion, and we made several suggestions for him to consider, in order to start to undo some of the problems he has in the gay community because of his past anti-gay lyrics."

Among the items on the list of demands the gay rights lobbyists put forward was that Buju think about making statements in Jamaica calling for love toward gays; donate to the JFLAG group; hold a town hall meeting in Kingston about the need to respect gays and sing about loving gay people. All the suggestions were rejected by Buju, which is said to have infuriated the lobbyists present.

Petrelis also stated that although the meeting was a beneficial first step, the gay community will want more concrete steps taken, before their actions against Buju's concerts will cease.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Straight Pride NYC - August 2008 - B. There.


STRAIGHT PRIDE--It’s about damn time! Thank you NY!!!

There are reasons NYC is home to one of the most sophisticated, cosmopolitan, and enlightened populations on planet earth today. Below is only one of them. And while I won't rehash all I've said in these blogs over time again, I will say that I am changing ALL my plans to head to New York for Labor Day this year. You should too. Here's why: (Reposted: Yardflex.com)

July 12, 2008

Heterosexual Pride to be celebrated in New York

A Straight Pride Parade will roll out on August 31, 2008 in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, just one day ahead of the annual Caribbean Labor Day Parade.

In a press release sent out recently by members of the reggae community, who have organized this event as a response to gay groups coming down hard on some dancehall music; the parade was justified as being, "...a chance for Heterosexuals to gather together and proudly embrace their sexuality. The Parade will also allow reggae and dancehall fans who are in New York City for the Labor Day celebrations to get together and celebrate reggae, dancehall and family in love and unity. Adults are encouraged to bring their children along for the celebrations, as the event will be family oriented."

Not only have gay groups launched massive global advocacies against what they call reggae's long history of gay intolerance, they have also been successful in hitting artists hard, in the pocket, by pushing for show cancellations. Their aim is reportedly to stop reggae and dancehall artists from promoting anti-gay violence, harassment and bigotry through lyrics.

The release said further: "Gay friends and gay relatives must be left at home or worse kept in the closet."

Posted by yardFlex at July 12, 2008 01:57 PM

Now there is a template...let's take a page from NY's book and take this thing global. The culture I was raised on and still embrace deserves at least as much. Hope to see you in NY...B. There. If you Care.

One.

-A
For the record, let me just say that I never said gays don't have the right to be gay. All I'm saying is they definitely don't have the right to try and impose their will on everyone else. They definitely don't have the right to attempt to try and GLOBALLY discredit another culture, just because they disagree with its precepts, nor should they be given reign to unjustly and viciously smear reggae artists unfairly for practicing their inspired craft.
Agree? Disagree?
Speak on it then.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

NYC Carifest 2008 - CANCELLED!!! One Year after 2007 gay protest

The Reggae Compassionate Act, Sizzla cancelling European Tours, Sponsors defecting leftnright, decades running shows disappearing overnight...things that make you go hmmmmm right??? If not, it should. I hate to be a one to say I told you so..., BUT, the truth just is. It seems what started in the West done str8 saddled to the East.

Let me honestly just say... I saw this coming from at least 2003, the first year Capleton got banned from his annual, highly anticipated, presence at the former Reggae In the Park, another long running show that exists no more. It used to arrive every summer to S.F.'s Golden Gate Park, where enthralled thousands of Capleton's formerly adoring fans used to wait all year for him to bless us with his gift. He headlined at least three years running, every year, and amidst zero complaints. He always slaked our thirst for that raggamuffin roughness...never once dissappointing, and then not only was he cancelled, but after falling attendance and garbage pail line ups in the post capelton years, so was the show.

We recently lost Reggae on the River, though their lineups could be hit or miss near the end of their run too. It's replacement, Reggae Rising, put Sizzla on this year to help, but unlike Reggae on the River in the past, which nearly sold out a year in advance, they still got plenty tickets to sell less than a month out now. I want to go just to see how Sizzla perform in this new RCA climate. These ARE the F-n dayz.

With so much powerful inspiration how is it no one is taking this on. I think it has to begin with the born Jamaicans. It's your thing, on a level, But you know you got major backative, myself included, anyway it goes down.

This Gay v. Reggae thing has now steamrolled around the globe and landed squarely in NYC, and yet there is still no organized, effective, collective response from the Massive itself to deal wid the matter proper. What gives? I was sure that when this crud hit in places like New York, with its large nos. of WIs, we would start to see sumthin go. It early still, since the shit just hit the fan. I guess people there just startin to really analyze what's really goin down.
I'll just say take a page from the Bay Area experience, the activities of which I've been profiling in these blogs and otherwise for years now. Act big NOW, or, like us in the gay Yay, get used to seein groups like Slightly Stoopid, and other hippieish imitations of the real thing, start replace the people's choice artists we'd all prefer to be seeing in regular rotation.

See Press Release Below (where they try to blame it on the dang weather...yeah, right.):

It is with enormous regret that Reggae-Carifest N.Y., Inc. announces the cancellation of the Carifest C.A.R.E.S. AIDS Awareness Benefit Concert for Keep A Child Alive scheduled for Sunday July 6th at the USTA National Tennis Center. Due to the economic recession and very bad weather forecasts for the day of the concert, very few tickets for the concert have been sold. Accordingly, the only conclusion is that the concert must be cancelled. Moving forward with the concert under these circumstances will in no way benefit the cause. Reggae-Carifest N.Y., Inc. apologizes to all patrons who purchased tickets and assures that full refunds will be made. All ticket holders can return to point of purchase to receive a full refund.Thank you,Carifest C.A.R.E.
Repost from Rastainoz.com

http://rastainoz.com/blog//index.php/reggae/2008/04/05/gay_civil_rights_call_for_boycott_of_anyBy

Richard Burnettrburnett@hour.ca

"I hate it when people call me a hero," Gareth Henry, leader of the Kingston-based gay civil rights group Jamaica Forum for Lesbians, All-Sexuals and Gays (J-FLAG), told me over breakfast last October while in Montreal to lecture at Concordia. "I have to do what I do. My rights as a Jamaican citizen have been violated, so we must challenge the Jamaican government to do something [about widespread anti-gay violence in Jamaica]. It's true the chances of my being attacked are inevitable. But that's why I must go back."

Then, on his way to the office last November - after 13 of his gay friends were murdered since 2005 - two thugs approached him and threatened his life. "We know who you are and we're going to kill you," they told him.

Says Gareth today, "So I didn't go back home. I called my mother to collect my things."
On Jan. 26, Gareth returned to Canada and claimed refugee status. This time he hopes he won't have to return to Jamaica. "I prefer to live."

Gareth, British activist Peter Tatchell, myself and others have long documented how anti-gay dancehall reggae by the likes of Buju Banton, Sizzla and other dancehall stars fuels the anti-gay hate and violence in Jamaica, a nation Time magazine in 2006 called "the Most Homophobic Place on Earth."

Despite cancelled concerts worldwide, however, these dancehall dons remain unrepentant. So Stop Murder Music Canada (SMMC), along with Canada's national gay lobby group Égale and the international Metropolitan Community Church, are launching an international tourism boycott of Jamaica, as well as a boycott of all Jamaican goods and services, beginning on May 17, International Day Against Homophobia, if Jamaica doesn't repeal its buggery laws and introduce a national pro-gay education campaign.

In Toronto, the coalition has twice met with Jamaica's Consul General, Anne-Marie Bonner.
"We've asked the Jamaican government to respond by May 12," says SMMC founder Akim Ade Larcher. "This boycott will [also] include [all] reggae performers."
"We didn't go into this lightly," says Égale executive director Helen Kennedy. "It took a long time to get to this point. I'm cautiously optimistic they will do the right thing and denounce the escalating violence against gay people in Jamaica."

Others, like Montreal dub DJ Moss Man - who flew to Jamaica this week to film the new feature film Get Rock to Rocksteady: The Roots of Reggae, which will culminate with an April 19 concert with old-school superstars Ken Boothe, Judy Mowatt, Derrick Morgan, Leroy Sibbles, Marcia Griffiths, The Tamlins, Dawn Penn, U-Roy and others - have reservations about the boycott.
"I sympathize with the movement but I say a boycott might just backfire and make people more angry [against gay people]," Moss Man told me. "Boycotting Jamaicans won't make a difference anyway - they're already dirt fucking poor. Maybe they should target foreign nationals and rich Jamaicans."

"I think it's stupid to boycott an entire country over a specific issue that should be solved internally in Jamaica," says Cezar Brumeanu, manager of Montreal's House of Reggae nightclub and executive director of the Montreal International Reggae Festival. "Only Americans seem to get involved in other countries' internal affairs, and look where it got them: They're hated by everyone. I say let the Jamaicans solve their own problems internally, not by outside forces. As for the festival, we are not in the boycott business, we are in the reggae music business for everyone who likes to enjoy it."

Even the Fort Lauderdale-based International Gay & Lesbian Travel Association doesn't support the tourism boycott. In a statement, the IGLTA claims it "is in complete solidarity with Jamaica's own LGBT leadership, J-FLAG. Therefore, like J-FLAG, it is not our intention to provoke reprisals or political condemnation in Jamaica by supporting a global tourism boycott. We understand [a boycott] could be counterproductive to making true progress in that Caribbean nation, and instead we will focus on education, publicity and market competition to highlight and help curb these terrible abuses."

But Akim Ade Larcher is having none of that. "I have not seen the IGLTA take part in any education or awareness of homophobia in the Caribbean. For them to come in at this late date saying they don't support a tourism boycott is not in the best interest of effecting change in Jamaica. As for J-FLAG, strategically they can't [publicly] call for an international boycott - it puts their members' lives on the line."
Even J-FLAG's former co-chair, Gareth Henry, told me last October before he escaped to Canada that he would support a tourism boycott of Jamaica. "The violence against gay people is still increasing," Gareth told me this week.

As for my L.A.-based friend Roger Steffens, chair of the Grammy Awards reggae committee, personally dubbed "Ras Rojah" by Bob Marley and whose massive reggae archives were recently acquired by Jamaica to become the National Museum of Jamaican Popular Music, he says, "I think Bob [Marley] would be terribly upset about all of this and say that reggae music is positive and constructive. You can't go around killing people just because they live a life different than yours."

The Jamaican boycott goes into effect on May 17 on International Day Against Homophobia.

Red Stripe Pulls Out Thousands in Sponsorship from Sting and Sumfest 2008 after gay protest

I don't know when the reggae fraternity is going to finally get behind this issue en masse, but it seems that the will is just not there. Meanwhile the gay community is steamrolling all over reggae music to shape and form it into an image they want to own, and it is having an impact on artists. I saw Capelton in Long Beach recently, as one example, the Fyah man, and I'm telling you the man was just a shadow of his former self. I am sure the only reason he was even ALLOWED to perform was because he had already signed that Reggae Compassionate Act. I don't know what he does in shows in Miami or JA or NYC, but I definitely felt the difference. He was just so, I don't know how to describe it really, so silenced. I was like how many time he gon ask for lighters and he aint saying nothing to make that happen. It was kind of painful for me to even watch and just downright sad.

What I don't get is why this silence form the fans. I mean, I kind of get it that the gays are pretty much runnin things at a high high level in places, but, no matter, I still believe in the power of the people. Seriously, if gays are attacking little reggae, why they don't attack Christianity and Islam both of which disavow the homo lifestyle. Or that would be to aim to big for them I guess. But the message in reggae is no different from those. If I could find even 10 people willing to stand firm for the basic right to free speech, even in the face of the gay onslaught, there could be a powerful movement born since to most of those in this music is more than just music; it is life, despite what anyone outside might think or know of it... Unfortunately, as it stands, EVERYONE I have spoken to about this has opted out of the fight.

Maybe it's immigration issues or the fact of gay power in high places or whatever, but Oh well, in that case, all I can say is that based on the San Francisco/Bay Area, as just one of many other examples, where we saw our community wiped out completely and still dead today in terms of live performers, don't be surprised to wake up to find that the artists you most want to enjoy have been banned where you are too, or at least censored down to invisibility. We can't even post flyers when certain artists try to come to town. It's all underground now, and THAT only if they even brave to try and play here. In most cases they just don't bother come. All we get now is Culture, and Sista Carol in regular rotation, but zero new top artists and zero large venues, which Capeleton, for one, used to pack out here. It's one thing to say dem cyaan stop reggae music no matter what and quite another to stand up and make sure that is really the case.

In one sense, I see the music growing internationally but why is it A-OK to bow down to the dictates of somebody outside the community who has elected themselves culture police in order to demand of the artists dem what can and can't be said. Whose music is this anyway? Where did it originate, and to whom does it ultimately belong, the gays? Hard questions, yes, but there are easy answers if we keepin it real....One thing is for sure: when this stuff goes full circle, and it is moving forward faster and faster every time, listening certain reggae songs will not only be illegal but it will be made into a chargeable offense and a one way ticket to jail, mark my words. We ARE living in a police state in case yall haven't noticed.

Anyone even remember Get up, Stand up?

And as for Red Stripe, it might be brewed in JA but don't believe the hype; it's a European OWNED company.(Switzerland, I think, or somewhere like that)..see my previous blog on the perils of not owning our own...Peace Out.

Repost from Street Knowledge Media:

http://streetknowledge.wordpress.com/2008/04/07/red-stripe-pulls-plug-on-reggae-concerts-over-gay-protests/

In a repeat of a trend that reached its heights last year, mounting protest continues to dog the summer concert curcuit for Reggae artists. This time around one of the largest sponsors, Red Stripe is pulling out amidst protests about a rise in violent, homophobic lyrics. Last year gay activist groups mounted successful campaigns to shut down artists like Buju Banton (Mr. Boom Bye Bye) and Bounty Killer (People Dead!!!), who they identified as two of the more vocal advocates of violence against homosexuals. Red Stripe is retracting thousands in sponsorship money for "Sting" and "Reggae Sumfest."